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About Me

I am a Ph.D. student at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. I study the History of Biblical Interpretation, which includes Jewish and Christian interpretations of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. My interests are religion, politics, TV, movies, and reading.

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Was Jack Kemp More Courageous Than Ronald Reagan in Mississippi?

I was reading Russell Moore’s “What I’m Reading” this morning. One of the books that Moore listed was Jack Kemp: The Bleeding Heart Conservative Who Changed America, which was written by Morton Kondracke and Fred Barnes (the Beltway Boys).
Jack Kemp was a football player for the Buffalo Bills, a Republican
Congressman from New York, a 1988 candidate for the Republican
nomination for U.S. President, and the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development in George H.W. Bush’s Administration. He is known for his
support of supply-side economics, or tax cuts, but he is also known for
his concern for the poor and his sensitivity to racial issues.

What caught my eye in Moore’s brief description of the book was the
following: “One anecdote I found particularly inspiring takes place when
Kemp is running for president in 1988 and speaks at a fundraiser in my
home state of Mississippi. Kemp is warned to avoid references to Lincoln
and race, given the crowd in the room. As can be expected, Kemp spent
the entire speech calling for a convictional embrace of civil rights and
Lincoln’s ideas.”

That is amazing! Jack Kemp goes to Mississippi and speaks in favor
of Lincoln and civil rights. I thought about when Ronald Reagan as a
Republican candidate for President in 1980 spoke in Neshoba County,
Mississippi, and declared his support for states’ rights, including in
education (see my post here).
Reagan’s speech was not entirely bad, for Reagan said in that speech
that many welfare recipients do not want to be on welfare, and that is
in contrast with the “welfare queen” rhetoric that he used. But Reagan
endorsed states’ rights in education, in a state where a significant
issue involving states’ rights in education was segregation. If what
Kondracke and Barnes say about Kemp is true, then Kemp was more
courageous and trailblazing than Reagan!